This is one sticking point that I was alluding to in my other posts. It's like a lot of former/current posters here who've never had a real relationship. Those who consider themselves, battle hardened, jaded, victims of love that they are now so world weary because they haven't found someone that they "poo poo" any notion of ever being in love or having someone love them in return.
You're still young at 24/25.
And it's great that you're happy at being single, one should always be at that state even when they are looking to be in a relationship.
I don't think anyone here is telling you, you need to find someone to be happy.
My only point was just to have a little perspective of where you are, and where you could be. I wouldn't want you miss something really great because of your fears and because you've witnessed a lot of break ups/losses, etc. Who knows what will happen when you're 28? Or 30? What happens when you move?
To just say no to anything prospective just seems like a defense mechanism.
I've been talking a teenage classmate from school who sometimes randomly catches me on Facebook chat going, "Love is so hard! I'll be single forever!" and I ask what he's been doing on the dating front and he's like, "Nothing."

He's never even gone on a date and he's already ready to give up on love.
I guess when you're that young and inexperienced about life, you expect/want things to fall in your lap without any effort, but that's really not how it works in the real world! I've been trying to get him off his duff and out doing stuff, but that kind of motivation only comes from inside.
It IS absolutely about perspective.
You're right.
Instead of just saying 'I'm just like my mum so I'm going to end up in the same situation' I should be saying 'I'm just like my mum... What can I do to change that'.
That's a great first step. I was playing therapist (geez, it's been happening a lot

) to another friend whose parents are totally dysfunctional - she's recently realized her father is a class-A narcissist, and her mom is unhealthily dependent on him. No wonder why her love life is so messed up!
She still has a lot of work to do to get over her knee-jerk attraction to similarly narcissistic guys who treat her like crap, but having that kind of perspective is definitely the first step.
And maybe it was my mums lack of commitment to earlier relationships that is why she is alone now... Not the failure of this last ditch effort.
I mean, she said she has one guy she regrets.
It's the guy she was seeing when she slept with my dad
He was the love of her life, and she wished like crazy for him to be the father and not my Dad... But life wasn't that kind to her unfortunately.
Though she did get me out of it, and I know she doesn't regret that one bit
There's always a good and bad side to every situation, absolutely.
That's a biggie though, especially if she was cheating on the love of her life with some guy who ditched you both later. I don't believe in karma, but I do believe that our actions lead to consequences that may affect us far into the future.
Denial and dellusion are so hard to overcome in bad relationships sometimes!
It's easier for us on the outside to see though, whereas from the inside it's all warped.
Maybe, but many people are overthinking it. It may still be technically early on in our relationship, but my fiance and I ALWAYS clear the air. If I feel I've been a nag to him, I tell him that and that I appreciate his patience with me. If he's been a *****e to me (even when he
feels like he was a *****e and I was just like, "Whatever"

It has happened
very rarely, at any rate), he always apologizes afterwards and makes changes.
I hope that's something we don't lose when we get married. (In fact, I bet this is something they teach you in premarital counseling.) There never should be a point where you hate your partner, especially if it could be easily remedied with a honest "clearing of the air." I mean, it's one thing if you have one transgression. It's another if you let it keep going repeatedly time and time again. That's the line that my coworker and her husband crossed a loooong time ago, and I don't believe the relationship can be saved for that reason. There's too much baggage and resentment on both their parts. At least 5 years of it. A simple conversation can't fix that anymore, but often a simple conversation can fix much smaller transgressions if done early enough. You just need to know that your partner really does care about and respect you, and letting things fester is decidedly the wrong thing to do in that case.
My first relationship carried a lot of resentment on my part because I had low self-esteem and was a jealous beeeyotch. We probably should have broken up after the first year, but dragged it out for another 6 months because nobody had the guts to want something better. I don't want to go through that again.
Unfortunately I couldn't love a guy like that I don't think, at least not at this place in my life.
I feel like I'm channelling SuperMike here

but I genuinely do prefer alpha males.
No problem with that, although you'll have to be happy being the submissive partner in the relationship in that case.
Well, that's not entirely true. If you want to be an ambitious alpha too, you have to be comfortable playing the beta role at times. And so will he. I know of ambitious couples who could both be alpha relative to the general population (my sister is in one, and one famous example is Bill and Hillary Clinton), but both partners can't be alpha at once. One will have to play the more supportive part sometimes. Or at least be
okay with playing the more supportive part if that's what's needed.
I fully believe that's why most Hollywood marriages fall apart. Both partners want to be in the spotlight equally at the same time, and that rarely works out. Dueling ego, as it were, that are not fit to be in a long-term relationship to begin with.
Of course it's a defense mechanism.
I want to defend against unneccesary pain, that is mostly caused by what society and movies tell you that you should be looking for. And I want to do that by ripping away the illusion of finding that one true love that lasts forever, and just veiwing relationships as something fleeting. Never letting my head and my heart get sick with addiction to a person... Trying to have some self control by just treating every relationship realistically instead of daydreaming about weddings and growing old together.
I'll probably have relationships in my life I'm sure.
I just don't ever want to get so dependant on the other person that and so delluded by my love for them, that leaving them is either impossible or physically detrimental.
It seems like that kind of love is an indulgence. And just like drugs, the more you indulge, the bigger the come down.
Pick and choose what you want of your expectations. You're right - society and Hollywood tells us entirely unrealistic things. (I think rom coms are totally lame, I hate them with a passion!) But you can sit down and determine what YOU want out of a relationship.
Just because it happened to your mom, or even people around you, doesn't mean it will happen to you. People die, of course, but it's the attitude that makes the difference. If they are truly supportive partners, they will send you off the rest of your life the best way they know how.
The guy I met traveling? He's definitely in his 60s, and was looking forward to getting married to someone he had yet to meet, in two years.
ETM ... I think you need to let that one go ...
But she's
hot.
